If they would just teach the dog to mow lawns, pick fruit, or drive a cab, there would be no problem getting it into the country. . .

Army blocks soldier from bringing puppy back

WASHINGTON – More than 10,000 people have signed an online petition urging the Army to let an Iraqi puppy come home with a Minnesota soldier, who fears that “Ratchet” could be killed if left behind.

“I just want my puppy home,” Sgt. Gwen Beberg of Minneapolis wrote to her mother in an e-mail Sunday from Iraq, soon after she was separated from the dog following a transfer. “I miss my dog horribly.” Beberg, 28, is scheduled to return to the U.S. next month.

14 Comments

  1. The only problem is that Glenn Reynolds is behind the push to allow soldiers to bring back puppies from Iraq and we all know what he wants to do with them.

    This is a perfect example of the road to hell being paved with good intentions.

  2. So… this Gwen wants to take a dog from Iraq, where temperatures are commonly above 100F, and wants to take it to-of all places-Minnesota. And just in time for winter.

    I think the dog would have a higher chance of surviving in Iraq.

  3. Well, CNN reporters just steal things from Iraq, whether or not it’s legal, and then display them back home in their office. Yet a patriotic soldier who was actually doing something good for America can’t take her dog home? That sounds typical.

  4. Unless policy has changed in the less than 3 years since I’ve been back, SGT Beberg is breaking a special order. Theater wide it was ordered no Mascots. In times before units deployed overseas would have some animal as their company mascot/pet. Not anymore for this very reason. At my company we had a Golden Eagle that some of the local children found as a chick and gave to the unit before us. The only reason we got to keep it was because it was an endangered species and a 3 star general signed off on it. We tried to have the bird shipped off to the Birds Of Prey Wildlife center in Idaho because it was missing it’s left wing but still could be used for breeding. That was a no-go.

    I understand the love for your pet, but if my unit couldn’t get a freekin endangered eagle home that could be used to help rebuild the population, her chances of getting her dog home is less than none.

  5. I just got back last month, and no, the regs haven’t changed a bit. GO1a (Iraq) and GO1b (Afghanistan) still forbid pets, and mascots. Also porn, and cohabitation. And Booze. So, pretty much anything fun.

  6. UPDATE: Private animal rights group have chartered a jet to bring the dog to the US. Yay!
    Happy ending, and it didn’t cost me anything (no tax payer dollars were harmed in the completion of this rescue!).

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